Knowledge and capability unfold sequentially as you move, not all at once; beginning reveals what you need to know when you need to know it.
Imagine a scroll that reveals itself only as you unroll it—what lies ahead remains hidden, becoming visible only through forward movement. This is how wisdom actually develops. The person waiting for total knowledge before starting expects the scroll to be entirely visible beforehand; the person who begins accepts that understanding unfolds through movement. Each step reveals what the next step requires. Each beginning action generates information invisible to pure contemplation. This principle has profound practical implications: many things you believe you need to know before starting actually require that you've already started to make sense. The framework that would clarify everything remains abstract until applied. The doubt that seems disqualifying vanishes through engagement. The skill that appears impossible to acquire without more training develops naturally through practice. By beginning before you feel ready, you enter the unfolding process. You allow the scroll to reveal itself step by step rather than demanding to see the entire pattern in advance. This is not blind action but intelligent responsiveness: you gather real information, face actual obstacles, discover genuine strengths you didn't know you possessed. The scroll unfolds most beautifully to those willing to move with it, not to those demanding complete visibility before their first step.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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